While living in Chicago,[3] Laurinatis met Michael Hegstrand,[3]
later known as Road Warrior Hawk, and the two became close friends.
When Laurinaitis was around eight years old, he and Hegstrand both moved
to Minneapolis, Minnesota[4] Joe Laurinaitis grew up in Minnesota, having to work for a living from a very early age. He attended Irondale High School.[5] Because of his size and love of power lifting, Joe was an imposing figure and thus a very effective bouncer.[1] He worked as a bouncer at Grandma B's in the Twin Cities where he caught the eye of Eddie Sharkey, a well known wrestling trainer. Sharkey thought that Joe along with Mike Hegstrand, Richard Rood, and Barry Darsow could make it big in professional wrestling. He believed in them so much that he trained all four of them personally.[6]

Joe made his debut in November 1982, competing as The Road Warrior
using a biker gimmick. After only a few matches as a singles
competitor, Joe’s career and life would change forever thanks to an idea
by Paul Ellering.

When Paul Ellering was looking to put together a stable of heels in Georgia Championship Wrestling called The Legion of Doom,
it was decided to put Joe together with his good friend Mike Hegstrand
and change their names to "Animal" and "Hawk" respectively. Thus, the
Road Warriors were born. They first started out as biker gimmicks, on
The Road Warriors DVD, Animal said he felt like one of The Village People,
To look more intimidating, the two shaved their heads into Mohawks and
started wearing studded dog collars, spiked shoulder pads, and face
paint. The look and name was taken from Mad Max 2, helping to paint the two as no-mercy monsters. Their interview style was vicious, yet charismatic and a bit humorous.[6]

The team was an instant hit, revolutionizing the tag-team scene with
their power moves, no mercy attitudes, and innovative face paint that
would spawn many future imitators in wrestling.[7] In Georgia, they won the NWA National Tag Team Championship four times before moving on to bigger promotions, such as the American Wrestling Association in the US and All Japan Pro Wrestling,winning more tag team titles.[8] Coincidentally, it was on Right After Wrestling in March 2011, hosted by Arda Ocal and Jimmy Korderas, that Animal stated he never feuded or faced Hawk, because neither believed there was any psychology behind it.[9]

In 1988, the Road Warriors engaged in a violent feud with The Powers of Pain (The Barbarian and The Warlord)
the first team that could truly match the Road Warriors in power (and
who were one of the most well known Road Warrior clones). The Powers of
Pain even went so far as to injure Animal’s eye (kayfabe)
during a weightlifting competition. When Animal returned, he initially
wore a hockey goalie mask to protect his eye. The angle abruptly ended
when the Powers of Pain left the NWA after finding out they were booked
against the Road Warriors in a series of Scaffold Matches and they did
not want to get hurt by falling off the scaffold.[6]

The Road Warriors immediately signed with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in 1990 and were pushed into a feud with the most famous of all “Road Warrior Clones”, Demolition, a group which included their old training partner Barry Darsow.[1][27][28] Due to the ailing health of one of Demolition (Bill Eadie/"Ax") he was replaced by Crush but the magic of the original Demolition was gone and the feud did not live up to the high hopes of the fans.[6]

Just over a year after signing with the WWF, the Legion of Doom won the WWF World Tag Team Titles and held them for about 8 months.[8]
When they lost the titles, they briefly left the WWF, only to return
with long time manager Paul Ellering by their side, as well as a wooden
ventriloquist dummy called “Rocco”. Both members of the L.O.D. thought
the Rocco gimmick was stupid, and it led to Hegstrand walking out of the
WWF immediately following Summerslam 92, leaving Laurinaitis on his own for the first time in 9 years.[29]
Being a businessman, Animal went ahead and finished his contractual
obligations with the WWF, as a singles wrestler and occasionally teaming
with former rival Crush, formerly of Demolition. During a handicap
match in Japan against the Beverly Brothers in September 1992, Laurinaitis legitimately injured his back from a botched double suplex and had to take a lengthy hiatus.[7]

For the next couple of years, Laurinaitis stayed out of the wrestling
ring, collecting on a very lucrative insurance policy from Lloyd's of London
while Hegstrand competed all over the world. Near the end of 1995,
Laurinaitis' back had finally recovered enough for him to return to
active competition. Three years after everyone thought the Road Warriors
had ended, they reunited and signed a contract with World Championship Wrestling.[6] Upon their return in January 1996, they immediately started a feud with the Steiner Brothers, who returned in March, and Harlem Heat, before moving on to challenge the WCW Tag Team Champions Sting and Lex Luger.[30][31][32] The Road Warriors had several shots at the champions but never won the titles in the 6 months they were with the company. The Steiner Brothers
also arrived shortly after the Warriors did, and feuded with them to
try to prove who the best team of all time was. The Steiners got the
better of the feud and the Warriors left WCW in June 1996.

After several unsuccessful challenges the L.O.D. were repackaged as Legion of Doom 2000 with manager Sunny, although she did not stay with the team for long.[6] At the same time, Paul Ellering returned, but sided with D.O.A.,
whom L.O.D. were feuding with at the time; Ellering and Animal
explained on the Road Warriors DVD that it was hard for Ellering to work
with another team against the Road Warriors and difficult to rip on his
former team on promos.

In 1998, the Legion of Doom became involved in their most
controversial angle, playing off Hegstrand’s real life drug and alcohol
problems. Hawk started to show up drunk or “unable to perform” on TV. As
Hawk proved more and more erratic and unreliable, a third L.O.D.
member, Puke,
was introduced to team with Animal while Hawk dealt with his personal
issues. The storyline ended with accusations that Puke had been the
"enabler" of Hawk's problems, exploiting them to take Hawk’s place in
the team. During the controversial segment, Hawk was shown to have
fallen off the Titan Tron. Neither Hegstrand nor Laurinaitis approved of
the WWF exploiting Hegstrand’s personal problems, which caused them to
subsequently leave the WWF.[29]

While the Road Warriors never officially broke up, Animal started
making an increasing number of solo appearances after they left the WWF
as Hegstrand struggled with drug and alcohol addiction.[7]

In 2001 Animal landed a prominent position in WCW as the “Enforcer” of the stable known as The Magnificent Seven with the objective to protect WCW World Champion Scott Steiner.[35] Laurinaitis most likely landed the high-profile role thanks to his brother John
who had a powerful behind-the-scenes role with the company. The
Magnificent Seven split up shortly before Vince McMahon purchased WCW;
Animal’s contract was not one of the contracts the WWF picked up.

The Road Warriors appeared in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling in late 2002-early 2003 as part of a group that opposed Vince Russo’s faction Sports Entertainment Xtreme but only wrestled one actual match for the federation.[36]

Animal and Hawk made a surprise appearance on RAW on May 12, 2003 when they took on Kane and Rob Van Dam for the World Tag Team Championship.[1][37]
Although Hawk and Animal came up short in their attempt to become
three-time champions, it was clear that Hawk had defeated the demons
that had once kept him from competing, and the Road Warriors had hopes
of returning to WWE. However, Hawk died on October 19, 2003.[7]

Animal made a return to WWE on the July 14 episode of SmackDown! in 2005, where he was challenged by the then-WWE Tag Team ChampionsMNM to a title match at The Great American Bash.[38][39] Finding a new tag team partner in Heidenreich, Animal went on to defeat MNM for the titles, dedicating the win to Hawk by saying, "Hawk, this one was for you, brother!"[1][8]
The two would team up for a few months in a new chapter of the Legion
of Doom, with Heidenreich adopting the L.O.D.'s shoulder pads, face
paint, and mohawk haircut. However, this came to an end with
Heidenreich's release from WWE on January 17, 2006.[40]

On the March 3, 2006 episode of SmackDown!, Animal teamed up with Matt Hardy to face MNM. After he and Hardy lost the match, Animal turned heel for the second time in his career by attacking and injuring Hardy's knee.[41]
Animal reasoned that he had realized that Hardy and Heidenreich were
screw-ups and that Road Warrior Hawk was the only tag team legend and
partner for him. After the heel turn, Animal, once again known simply as
The Road Warrior, would drop many aspects of the well-known Road
Warrior gimmick, losing the face paint, and shoulder pads. Animal's
look at this time was similar to his old Road Warrior gimmick in the
early 1980s he had prior to teaming up with Hawk.

In his final WWE appearance, Animal defeated Paul Burchill on the May 6, 2006 edition of Velocity.[42] On June 26, 2006, Animal was released from his WWE contract.[43]

On March 9, 2011, Road Warrior Animal appeared on 1wrestling Radio in
Philadelphia with "The Voice of Choice" Bruce Wirt and Bill Apter. Wirt
called for both Animal and Apter's inclusion in the WWE Hall of Fame.[44]
Following that on-air campaign by Wirt, the WWE announced on March 28,
2011 on WWE Raw that the Road Warriors will be inducted into the 2011
Hall of Fame. Animal also spoke openly about his future induction on
Right After Wrestling just minutes after the announcement on WWE Raw.
Animal told hosts, Arda Ocal and Jimmy Korderas
that the WWE was going to create a physical Hall of Fame in Tampa and
he was going to donate his trademarked 'spiked-shoulder pads' to that
Hall.[45]

In 2011, Joe Laurinaitis released an autobiography titled The Road Warriors: Danger, Death, and the Rush of Wrestling,
published by Medallion Press, Inc. The book talks about the rise of The
Road Warriors, shares funny stories of life on the road, and offers
candid behind-the-scenes accounts of the wrestling industry.

Joe and his wife Julie, a former powerlifter and bodybuilder, have two children, son James (born 1986) and daughter Jessica (born 1989). Joe also has a son named Joseph (born 1981) from a previous marriage.[46][47]

Joe's brothers are or have both been involved in professional wrestling. John Laurinaitis (Johnny Ace) is Executive Vice President of Talent Relations for World Wrestling Entertainment and a former wrestler. Marcus Laurinaitis is a former wrestler, mainly known as one half of the tag team The Wrecking Crew (Terminator / Fury).